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Expand And Transform Your Guitar Playing By Transcribing And Arranging Songs From Other Instruments Onto Your Acoustic

by Simon Candy

A fantastic way to totally transform your guitar playing is to simply transcribe, or arrange a song that another instrument plays, onto your acoustic guitar. By transcribe I am meaning to copy or arrange the musical lines and phrases of another instrument and play these on your acoustic guitar.

Arranging lines and phrases from other instruments is a great way to become more creative and inventive with your own guitar playing. Fact is, no two instruments are the same when it comes to creating music. They not only sound different of course, but they also execute and arrange the sound of their notes in unique ways.

Through the act of arranging and transcribing from an instrument other than a guitar, you will tap into the unique qualities of that instrument and play your own guitar in ways you never would have otherwise.

Arranging songs from other instruments is also fantastic training for your ear as it can be more challenging to work out the notes of another instrument, simply because they sound different than those of a guitar that your ear is more use to hearing.

Speaking of "challenging", this is nothing more than an opportunity for improvement. Never shy away from a challenge. Rather, meet it head on and reap the rewards of the improvement you'll make with your guitar playing. This will always be in proportion to the amount of effort you are willing to put in.

But What If I Can't Transcribe To Save My Life, Let Alone Arrange Songs From Other Instruments!

Hands down, without question, the best thing I ever did regarding my guitar playing was to start trying to work out songs using my ear. I did this very early on, within the first year of playing, and was so glad I did!

Sure it can be challenging, I certainly discovered this, but it is also extremely rewarding both in the achievement you feel in having worked something out totally by ear, and in the massive improvements you will see in your guitar playing as a result. It is for sure one of the best ways to fast track your progress on the guitar.

It is beyond the scope of this article to delve too deeply into learning how to transcribe songs. Our focus is more on arranging songs from other instruments onto our acoustic guitars, and all the cool benefits we receive as a result.

Having said that, here are a few quick tips to get you started transcribing straight away so you can make massive improvement in all areas of your guitar playing. If you already work out and arrange songs by ear you may still find some useful tips here.

On a side note, it is not necessary to be able to work out songs by ear to reap the benefits of this article. You could simply get a copy of the music the other instrument is playing and go from there.

When working out and arranging songs using your ear be sure to:

Listen very carefully and stop the recording immediately after the part you are working out. What your your ear last heard sticks, therefore you will have more chance of getting it down this way.

Just work out a little piece at a time. This will likely be a single note or chord if you are just starting out. Trying to do too much at once won't work. As you get better you will be able to work out larger chunks, but for now, start with little bite size pieces.

Sing/pitch the note you are trying to work out with your voice. If you can't sing it, you won't have much chance finding it on your guitar.

Listen to and work out the notes the bass guitar is playing, as it will often be targeting the root notes of the chords, and will help greatly in working these out.

Take advantage of technology. There are many great programs and apps out there that will allow you to manipulate a song in various ways that will make it much easier to work it out using your ear. You can slow music down without effecting the pitch as well as loop sections of a song etc.

Above all else, just jump right in and start using your ear to work out bits and pieces of songs from this day onwards. You won't regret it! There are so many advantages to this including the ability to arrange songs onto your acoustic guitar from other instruments, so that you can continually create and innovate with your own acoustic playing.

A Word On Phrasing

As mentioned earlier, listening carefully to how different instruments are played, tapping into their nuances, and in turn arranging versions of these onto your guitar, will open you up to new, unique, and innovative ways of playing and phrasing your notes.

By phrasing, I am referring to HOW the notes are played and organised on a particular instrument. Different instruments will have unique phrasing, and as guitarists we want to tap into this and make it a part of our own playing.

We can relate the phrasing of musical notes to the way we speak. We all phrase our words and sentences differently as we are unique human beings. We put different emphasis on certain words depending on what we are wanting to say and how we are feeling. This is phrasing and is no different when playing music.

In this article I am referring to the general phrasing of an instrument. Each musician will have their own unique phrasing regardless of the instrument they are playing, and of course it's great to learn from those that really appeal to you.

So Why Arrange Songs Other Instruments Play Onto Your Acoustic Guitar

To work out a song, or part thereof, that another instrument is playing, onto your acoustic guitar is in principle no different to working out a song that a guitar is playing. It's the benefits that your playing will receive through doing so that is the point and why you want to be doing this.

Think of a horn player like a saxophonist or trumpeter. What is the one big difference when it comes to the phrasing of notes on these instruments compared to a guitar?

Answer: They need to stop to breathe regularly between the notes they play.

As guitarists we don't need to do this and is one reason why it's easy to get trapped into playing endless runs of notes with little to no phrasing. Transcribing and arranging music from horn players onto your acoustic guitar will certainly introduce the concept of space into your phrasing. What you don't play is just as important as what you do.

How about a vocalist?

Transcribing and arranging the lines that a vocalist sings onto your guitar will have you playing much more melodically as oppose to playing endless riffs. There is nothing wrong with riffs, but you will learn the finesse, subtleties and nuances that you can bring to a line of music, by arranging the melodies vocalists sing onto your guitar.

How about a pianist?

Obviously the way a piano is played is very different to the way you play a guitar. However there is much we can gain by arranging music played by this instrument.

It's because of these differences that you will be forced into having to come up with unique ways to arrange what the piano is playing onto your guitar. It's a little different to a vocal or a horn line where you can more or less work it out note for note onto your guitar.

Take the following piano progression for example:

To try and arrange this onto your guitar note for note isn't really going to be possible, and isn't really the point either. Yes, you can certainly transcribe a fair portion of it onto your guitar without having to change too much, however you will need to get a little creative with the arrangement above for it to work on a guitar.

How about something like this:

For my acoustic arrangement of the piano excerpt, I decided to capo the guitar at the 5th fret. The main reason for this was so I had more open chords at my disposal.

I am fingerpicking throughout, with chord hits at the beginning and end of most bars to emulate what the piano arrangement is doing. At no stage am I trying to play the piano part note for note, rather I am simply re creating the feel of it onto my acoustic guitar.

If you listen carefully to the piano excerpt, you'll notice the arpeggios extend up into a second octave when the progression repeats. I've gone for a similar approach in my acoustic arrangement, when upon the repeat of the progression, I fret the chords an octave higher in the second half of each bar. These are the cool little creative things you find yourself doing when looking to arrange something from another instrument onto your guitar.

To fully develop your musical skills on the guitar, you need to also be looking outside of it. Broadening your horizons and studying the phrasings and nuances of other instruments, by creating arrangements from them, will go a long way to improving your own acoustic guitar playing.